Hi All,
OK, apologies in advance, I feel like this is a rather unintelligent
question that I probably know the answer to, but I am banging my head
against a wall trying to understand what is happening.
I have an ETL program, written in Python, that uses mutiple processes
to read and load a bunc
If I define a publication at time Tp, then load some data on the
publisher, then start a subscription at time Ts, then load some more
data on the publisher, does the subscriber get data from Tp or Ts
onwards?
Also, if a subscription is disabled and then re-enabled does it lose
the data inbetween
see how else it could be practically
implemented, but just want to be sure I am understanding. The idea
that there are two phases (copy existing data then replicate
operations) is a big help.
Thanks again,
Andrew
On Fri, Apr 22, 2022 at 09:13:15AM -0700, David G. Johnston wrote:
> On Fri, Ap
Hi,
How can I estimate the correct value for max_replication_slots
(logical replication, pg 14)?
As far as I understand, they're needed to keep WAL files on the
publisher when something goes wrong. But we seem to need way, way
more slots than publishers. Is it one slot per publisher per table
Hi All,
I would appreciate some advice on adding data to logically replicated
tables on the subscriber. I am worried about contention between
writes from local data loading and replication.
We have 14 publisher databases (all with identical schema) that are
constantly receiving new data. The